Pubdate: Sun, 13 Apr 2014 Source: Asbury Park Press (NJ) Section: 2014 Asbury Park Press Contact: http://www.app.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/26 Author: Neill Franklin Note: Neill Franklin, a retired police officer, is executive director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, a Silver Springs, Md.-based group of law enforcement officials opposed to the war on drugs. Note: OPED 1 of 3 TO LEGALIZE POT...OR NOT [Asbury Park Press Editor] A bill to legalize marijuana in New Jersey has been introduced by Democratic lawmakers in both the Senate and the Assembly, even though Gov. Chris Christie has indicated he would veto it. The sponsors argue that taxing marijuana would help raise badly needed revenue. Christie says legalization would "send the wrong message" at a time when the state is faced with a heroin epidemic and widespread abuses of prescription drugs.A Monmouth University/Asbury Park Press Poll released last week showed a nearly even split among those who favored and those who opposed legalization of marijuana. Below are essays presenting the cases for and against legalization. PROHIBITION LEADS TO HOST OF PROBLEMS Yes, New Jersey should legalize, regulate and tax marijuana. This is a smart, responsible way to reduce crime, protect our kids and raise revenue for the state. In 2009, New Jersey law enforcement made more than 26,000 arrests for marijuana, disproportionately of people of color, each one of which cost taxpayers somewhere around $1,500 in police and court costs and several hours in law enforcement time, diverting those resources from violent crime. For every hour that police waste prosecuting someone for marijuana, that's an hour not spent going after real criminals. Accordingly, as the war on drugs has expanded, the rate at which we've solved violent crimes has plummeted. Instead, those criminals benefit more than anyone from the prohibition of marijuana because its illegal status reduces competition from legitimate businesses and ensures profits no legal commodity can command. With those profits, crime syndicates buy guns, run human trafficking rings and fund every other criminal activity. Legalizing marijuana would do infinitely more harm to these criminal organizations' bottom lines than 40 years of prohibition and billions of dollars wasted on the war on drugs ever has, while reducing the harms of use at the same time. That's because most of the harms associated with marijuana use are actually a result of prohibition itself. Drug dealers don't ask for ID and they don't provide any assurances that what they're selling is pure or how powerful it is. That endangers our kids, who report that marijuana is already easier to buy than beer and, because it's unregulated, there is nothing to prevent it from being laced with more dangerous drugs and contaminated by substances such as toxic molds, fungi and pesticides. Were we instead to legalize marijuana, we could ensure its safety and would automatically separate the markets for marijuana and for other drugs so people who choose to use marijuana would be less likely to move on to other substances. In countries that have decriminalized drugs, we've seen drug use go down among minors, and preliminary figures for Colorado and Washington, the two states that have legalized marijuana thus far, show that traffic fatalities have decreased in the first year of legalization. Additionally, as we have seen in Colorado, tax revenues from regulated sales can be a tremendous financial boon to the community. The latest projections from the nonpartisan Colorado Legislative Council suggest upward of $65 million in tax revenue a year, the first $40 million of which will go to schools. What could New Jersey schools do with that kind of money? Forty years of drug war have taught us that no matter how much money we spend, no matter how many people we arrest, marijuana use is not a problem that can be addressed through law enforcement. It's time we let go of a model proven not to work and try something we know can. It's time we legalize, regulate and tax marijuana in New Jersey. Neill Franklin, a retired police officer, is executive director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, a Silver Springs, Md.-based group of law enforcement officials opposed to the war on drugs. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D